On the first night of our Indian holiday, the earth moved. Gazing out of the bedroom window, with its panoramic views over the trees covering New Delhi's golf course, I blearily noticed that the curtains were swaying back and forth. So was the bed. Then my phone began to ping with earthquake notifications. As my family told me crossly the following day, I ought to have dressed and run down the seven flights of stairs to find safety outdoors. Instead, I commended myself to fate, and the hotel's architect, and allowed myself to be rocked gently to sleep.
The experience set the tone for a fortnight that was as surreal as it was exhilarating, a sensory overload as we processed the vibrancy of the colours, the whirling crowds, the noises, the smells, the landscapes, the flavours and the history of the subcontinent.
On arrival in New Delhi, we started as we were to go on: at full throttle. Having disembarked from an overnight flight, we were whisked off in an air-conditioned car, passing whizzing tuk-tuks, ambling cows and cruising mopeds, to visit the government district. Its wide, shady boulevards and Lutyens-designed colonial-era bungalows, now owned by India's richest families, could have been transplanted from Hampstead, but for the monkeys strolling along the walls, while the sprawling administrative palaces made Whitehall and Big Ben look rather insignificant. There followed an afternoon of the city's greatest historical hits: we were ushered to Humayun's Tomb, built by a devoted wife for her husband after he fell off his library steps, and marvelled at the Qutub Minar, a 12th-century minaret more than 70m high.
Denne historien er fra September 2023-utgaven av Harper's BAZAAR Singapore.
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Denne historien er fra September 2023-utgaven av Harper's BAZAAR Singapore.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
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